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p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice

RelB-deficient mice (relB(−) (/−)) have a complex phenotype including multiorgan inflammation and hematopoietic abnormalities. To examine whether other NF-κB/Rel family members are required for the development of this phenotype or have a compensatory role, we have initiated a program to generate dou...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Weih, Falk, Durham, Stephen K., Barton, Debra S., Sha, William C., Baltimore, David, Bravo, Rodrigo
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2196264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9104822
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author Weih, Falk
Durham, Stephen K.
Barton, Debra S.
Sha, William C.
Baltimore, David
Bravo, Rodrigo
author_facet Weih, Falk
Durham, Stephen K.
Barton, Debra S.
Sha, William C.
Baltimore, David
Bravo, Rodrigo
author_sort Weih, Falk
collection PubMed
description RelB-deficient mice (relB(−) (/−)) have a complex phenotype including multiorgan inflammation and hematopoietic abnormalities. To examine whether other NF-κB/Rel family members are required for the development of this phenotype or have a compensatory role, we have initiated a program to generate double-mutant mice that are deficient in more than one family member. Here we report the phenotypic changes in relB(−) (/−) mice that also lack the p50 subunit of NFκB (p50(−) (/−)). The inflammatory phenotype of p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−) double-mutant mice was markedly increased in both severity and extent of organ involvement, leading to premature death within three to four weeks after birth. Double-knockout mice also had strongly increased myeloid hyperplasia and thymic atrophy. Moreover, B cell development was impaired and, in contrast to relB(−) (/−) single knockouts, B cells were absent from inflammatory infiltrates. Both p50(−) (/−) and heterozygous relB(−) (/+) animals are disease-free. In the absence of the p50, however, relB(−) (/+) mice (p50(−) (/−) relB (−/+)) had a mild inflammatory phenotype and moderate myeloid hyperplasia. Neither elevated mRNA levels of other family members, nor increased κB-binding activities of NF-κB/Rel complexes could be detected in single- or double-mutant mice compared to control animals. These results indicate that the lack of RelB is, in part, compensated by other p50-containing complexes and that the “classical” p50-RelA–NF-κB activity is not required for the development of the inflammatory phenotype.
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spelling pubmed-21962642008-04-16 p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice Weih, Falk Durham, Stephen K. Barton, Debra S. Sha, William C. Baltimore, David Bravo, Rodrigo J Exp Med Article RelB-deficient mice (relB(−) (/−)) have a complex phenotype including multiorgan inflammation and hematopoietic abnormalities. To examine whether other NF-κB/Rel family members are required for the development of this phenotype or have a compensatory role, we have initiated a program to generate double-mutant mice that are deficient in more than one family member. Here we report the phenotypic changes in relB(−) (/−) mice that also lack the p50 subunit of NFκB (p50(−) (/−)). The inflammatory phenotype of p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−) double-mutant mice was markedly increased in both severity and extent of organ involvement, leading to premature death within three to four weeks after birth. Double-knockout mice also had strongly increased myeloid hyperplasia and thymic atrophy. Moreover, B cell development was impaired and, in contrast to relB(−) (/−) single knockouts, B cells were absent from inflammatory infiltrates. Both p50(−) (/−) and heterozygous relB(−) (/+) animals are disease-free. In the absence of the p50, however, relB(−) (/+) mice (p50(−) (/−) relB (−/+)) had a mild inflammatory phenotype and moderate myeloid hyperplasia. Neither elevated mRNA levels of other family members, nor increased κB-binding activities of NF-κB/Rel complexes could be detected in single- or double-mutant mice compared to control animals. These results indicate that the lack of RelB is, in part, compensated by other p50-containing complexes and that the “classical” p50-RelA–NF-κB activity is not required for the development of the inflammatory phenotype. The Rockefeller University Press 1997-04-07 /pmc/articles/PMC2196264/ /pubmed/9104822 Text en This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Weih, Falk
Durham, Stephen K.
Barton, Debra S.
Sha, William C.
Baltimore, David
Bravo, Rodrigo
p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice
title p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice
title_full p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice
title_fullStr p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice
title_full_unstemmed p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice
title_short p50–NF-κB Complexes Partially Compensate for the Absence of RelB: Severely Increased Pathology in p50(−) (/−) relB(−) (/−)Double-knockout Mice
title_sort p50–nf-κb complexes partially compensate for the absence of relb: severely increased pathology in p50(−) (/−) relb(−) (/−)double-knockout mice
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2196264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9104822
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